With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new albums by Car Seat Headrest, U.S. Girls, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Alva Noto, Ought, Superchunk, and Nipsey Hussle. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week.

In 2011, Will Toledo self-released an album called Twin Fantasy. Six years later, Car Seat Headrest have released a completely re-recorded version of it, now with a full band. “It was never a finished work and it wasn’t until last year that I figured out how to finish it,” Toledo said in a statement. Read Pitchfork’s track reviews of “Beach Life-in-Death” (named Best New Track) and “Nervous Young Inhumans.”

Glass, the latest collaboration between Ryuichi Sakamoto and German electronic artist Alva Noto, is a 45-minute improvised live recording that draws its name from the location where it was created: architect Philip Johnson’s historic Glass House in New Canaan, Conn. The album follows Sakamoto and Noto’s 2015 original score for The Revenant, which also featured music from the National’s Bryce Dessner.

Superchunk’s latest album is not a Drake and Future covers project. Instead, it’s the band’s meditation on the 2016 U.S. presidential election. “The album is about a lot of things of course, but mainly dealing with anxiety and worse in the face of incipient authoritarianism,” Mac McCaughan said in a statement.